Article pubs.acs.org/est
In Vitro Exposures in Diesel Exhaust Atmospheres: Resuspension of PM from Filters versus Direct Deposition of PM from Air Kim M. Lichtveld,†,§ Seth M. Ebersviller,† Kenneth G. Sexton,† William Vizuete,† Ilona Jaspers,‡ and Harvey E. Jeffries*,† †
Department of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States ‡ Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States S Supporting Information *
ABSTRACT: One of the most widely used in vitro particulate matter (PM) exposures methods is the collection of PM on filters, followed by resuspension in a liquid medium, with subsequent addition onto a cell culture. To avoid disruption of equilibria between gases and PM, we have developed a direct in vitro sampling and exposure method (DSEM) capable of PM-only exposures. We hypothesize that the separation of phases and post-treatment of filtercollected PM significantly modifies the toxicity of the PM compared to direct deposition, resulting in a distorted view of the potential PM health effects. Controlled test environments were created in a chamber that combined diesel exhaust with an urban-like mixture. The complex mixture was analyzed using both the DSEM and concurrently collected filter samples. The DSEM showed that PM from test atmospheres produced significant inflammatory response, while the resuspension exposures at the same exposure concentration did not. Increasing the concentration of resuspended PM sixteen times was required to yield measurable IL-8 expression. Chemical analysis of the resuspended PM indicated a total absence of carbonyl compounds compared to the test atmosphere during the direct-exposures. Therefore, collection and resuspension of PM into liquid modifies its toxicity and likely leads to underestimating toxicity.
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INTRODUCTION The purpose of this study is to illustrate potential problems with a widely used atmospheric particulate matter (PM) sampling and in vitro exposure method for assessing a particular PM’s ability to elicit toxicant-induced biological effects in cultured human cells. The majority of in vitro studies examining the effects of PM exposure have used an extractive technique based on collecting ambient PM on filters, resuspending the particles in a liquid medium, and then adding them to a cell culture.1−7 This method is referred to here as the “resuspended PM method”. Yet, many studies of physical and thermal processes among PM and volatile and semivolatile oxidized organic gases have shown that, in a reactive organic gas and PM system like the urban atmosphere, the exchange of mass between the gas and PM phases can be rapid and dynamic.8−12 The understanding that PM can gain mass (and acquire toxic properties) from gas-to-particle processes seems to be accepted by toxicologists and health-researchers.13−21 The concept that this mass is likely labile and can be lost from the PM when the gaseous environment is changed is missing from these studies.22,23 As an example of how fast mass may leave SOA aerosols, Kamens and Coe24 measured effective rate constants for off-gassing of fluorene and phenanthrene for diesel soot particles of 0.51 s−1 and 0.37 s−1 (loss of 95% of on-particle © 2012 American Chemical Society
mass in 6−8 s if gas removed). For pinonaldehyde, a seven carbon product of alpha-pinene oxidation, a rate constant for off-gassing from PM of 1.8 s−1 was used to successfully model SOA in outdoor chamber studies (loss of 95% of on-particle mass in